Visiting the place where Vettes are born.

Order the car, get yourself to Bowling Green, Kentucky, and then the fun begins.

It starts with a tour of the Corvette factory across the street, followed by an in-depth walk-around of the car and its features, and then some time in the National Corvette Museum itself. Then you get driven out of Corvette Boulevard, the
indoor street replica where the day's deliveries are staged, with all of the museum employees giving you—and the car—a round of applause. The car is yours
(we're borrowing ours for a year, but we didn't want to ruin the illusion, so we played along), and then you drive home.

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In short, we loved it. Here are a few interesting things learned during our five-hour visit to Corvette heaven. Cameras aren't normally allowed on the
plant tour, so be sure to check out the photos we shot with special permission.

"Zach Bowman"

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1. The museum's Corvette Boulevard is also referred to as "the nursery." Eight cameras, each trained on an individual parking spot, stream to the web so that family and
friends can keep an eye on you and your baby.

2. Before the plant tour, we were offered "mutilation protection"—little pieces of crudely-sewn neoprene. It's not for you, though—it's to protect the cars on the line from being scratched by rings, watches, and belt buckles.

3. The Vette line moves at a slow saunter, with a target of 17.2 cars rolling off per hour.
There's only one shift, and the jobs are prized positions within GM's manufacturing division.

"Zach Bowman"

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4. You'll never see two convertibles in a row on the factory line. A coupe is always slotted in between because the convertible top takes a little longer to
install. Two droptops back-to-back would slow the line down.

"Zach Bowman"

5. Just one of the 42 1983 Corvettes built still exists, and it lives at the museum.
The on-site archives house copies of the build sheets for the never-sold '83s (and all other cars produced) in a fire-safe room.

6. There's exactly one Ford engine in the Corvette museum.
Even if it is half-hidden in a 1950s service garage
display—it's a nod to Zora Arkus-Duntov, the father of the Corvette, who came to GM after working on Ford V8s.

"Zach Bowman"

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7. Every museum-delivered Corvette is signed by three guys.
They do the same prep that a dealer would, but also some detailing and wet sanding where needed. Their names can be found underneath, on the cladding by
the driver's-side rocker.

"Zach Bowman"

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8. For one summer, Corvettes were built in two places at once.
During the plant changeover in 1981, cars were still coming out of the St. Louis factory while Bowling Green was getting up and running.

9. The original Corvette crossed-flags logo had an American flag on the left.
It was swapped last-minute before the car was unveiled because, according to the National Flag Code, the stars and stripes can't be used for advertising
purposes. The original badge is in the museum (but presumably not in its ads). The flag that replaced the American one features a fleur-de-lis, because
Louis Chevrolet was French. So much for patriotism.

"Zach Bowman"

10. You might hear an 8-bit version of the Star Wars theme in the plant, or "Popeye the Sailor Man." Like many modern auto-manufacturing facilities, Bowling Green uses a version of the "andon" system developed by Toyota. If there's a problem on the line,
like a parts shortage or quality defect, employees can pull a cord that starts a song. The appropriate people are alerted by the coded tones, and the
problem is fixed in real-time.

11. The original Corvette museum is now a Mexican restaurant.
We ate at a barbecue joint down the road, instead.

12. The Corvette was named for a class of sailing warships.
Myron Scott, the GM employee who suggested the name, was also the father of the soapbox derby. America owes him a great debt.

"Zach Bowman"

13. If someone tries to sell you a used Corvette claiming it's never seen rain, they're lying. Kind of.
All cars are water-tested before rolling out the door to check things like roof and windshield seals.

"Zach Bowman"

14. Yes, they let you seethe sinkhole.
The doorway to the Skydome, the room where the Earth opened up, is now a viewing partition where you can watch men with heavy machinery search for the last
of the eight cars that the sinkhole swallowed. Those that have been extracted are on display—in all their clay-covered, damaged glory—right before you exit
through the gift shop. The plan is for GM to take the cars back in August for full restoration, so go now if you want to see their "before" appearance.